Feelings Don’t Care About Economic Facts
<p>We’ve talked in the past about the unreliability of polls that ask Americans to rate their feelings about the economy and economic issues. People’s perceptions of the economy and their own economic circumstances have always been complex but the dynamics are wonkier than ever.</p>
<p>For one thing, most people don’t <em>feel</em> rich — no matter how much money they have. <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/2023-are-you-rich-best-cities-to-live-salary/?srnd=premium" rel="noopener ugc nofollow" target="_blank">This <em>Bloomberg</em> report</a>, for instance, points out that many Americans wealthy enough to rank in the top ten percent of earners feel like they’re just scraping by: “In a nationwide survey of over 1,000 objectively wealthy Americans — defined in this case as making at least $175,000 a year, roughly the amount required to crack the top 10% of US tax filers — a full quarter told us they were either ‘very poor,’ ‘poor,’ or ‘getting by but things are tight.’ Half described themselves as just ‘comfortable.’”</p>
<p>According to this <em>Bloomberg</em> poll, there’s even a group of households earning more than $5 million per year who consider themselves “very poor, poor, or getting by.”</p>
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